As we have briefly discussed, one of the biggest challenges encountered by digital forensic investigators, whether in criminal or civil cases is the international nature of their investigative scope.
When investigating cases such as DDoS attacks (where a person or group of people flood a website or machine with requests in order to stop it from functioning), online credit card details theft, or bank fraud for example, it is likely that an investigator may find their suspects scattered all around the world. In a recent case involving the live streaming of child abuse from the Philippines, one of the main problems the investigators ran into was that the people who were watching the live streamed content were also subjects for investigation, but they were spread internationally and were difficult to track down due to so many of them using various methods of obfuscation. Laws around the world differ too: legislation in one country may create a legal loophole that causes havoc for a case and has implications on whether it is eventually brought to a conclusion or shelved.
The increasingly globalised nature of crime means that this is a problem we cannot ignore - it is not something that is going to go away. On the contrary, it looks set to only grow further with each passing year. Nowadays, our data is stored in the cloud—Nowadays, our data is stored in the cloud; people we interact with aren't just those we have met in real life, but instead people we would have previously termed strangers now increasingly form the basis of our social interactions; our bank accounts are accessible from almost anywhere in the world, often in multiple currencies. It is difficult enough to trace the actions and data trail of a single individual who is merely living life in the 21st century, let alone to attempt to investigate a large group of people, spread across diverse physical locations, who are making deliberate and sustained attempts to obfuscate data and hide themselves from view.
Strides ahead are being made, however. Various projects have sprung up over recent years which aim to address the specific challenges brought up by international investigations. One example is the EVIDENCE Project coordinated by Maria Angela Biasotti, an Italian lawyer who, in collaboration with colleagues across Europe, is seeking to develop a common understanding of electronic evidence and a more globally viable way of collaborating between territories, as well as a more standardized criminal investigation procedure around the world.
A laudable goal, and one that the EVIDENCE Project at least is moving swiftly towards; at the time of writing, a test implementation between several member countries is on the cards. However, at the moment, investigators are still faced with having to work on cases that have international data sources and implications.